Dr Ladouceur’s editorial in the April 2017 issue of Canadian Family Physician1 is the latest in a long series of the journal’s commentaries2–4 in which the authors nostalgically reminisce about a bygone era when family doctors did everything and “comprehensive family practice” was the norm. A common thread among these editorials is the assertion that the traditional family practice model is the criterion standard and the progressive subspecialization of family doctors and the emergence of areas of focused practice is a perversion of family medicine. Interestingly, other than personal anecdotes and nostalgic references to the past, no actual evidence is provided by the authors that the quality of care delivered by family doctors during this presumed “golden era” was actually better than what is currently being provided by more focused general practitioners.

Ladouceur’s April editorial,1 however, is particularly disturbing on a number of levels. First, it is simply not true that hospitalist care is associated with increased harm levels for patients. In fact, an increasing body of Canadian evidence suggests the opposite. In an analysis of more than 30 000 patients admitted to the hospitalist program in a large community hospital in Ontario,5 Chong and I found that compared with traditional family physicians, hospitalist care was associated with a 12% to 75% reduction in mortality odds. Our study of course had a number of limitations, particularly that it was limited to 1 particular institution. Since that study, White has demonstrated that hospitalists in Ontario statistically significantly reduce the odds of mortality for patients admitted with 4 common conditions (delirium, pneumonia, congestive heart failure, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) by 7% to 31%.6 White’s study used a robust methodology to look at care outcomes for more than 55 000 patients admitted to 151 hospitals in Ontario. Both studies, as well as a number of others,7,8 have also shown similar reductions in readmission rates when hospitalists are involved. These studies certainly raise a number of questions: Should community-based family physicians with low volumes of inpatients be allowed to continue working in hospitals? Are family physicians who continue to maintain a broad practice able to maintain the competencies required to provide inpatient care?

The second reason why Dr Ladouceur’s article1 is upsetting is that physicians with family medicine training continue to comprise most hospitalists in Canada.9 While the growing number of internists who are now working as hospitalists10 is helping the specialty to evolve, hospital medicine in Canada continues to maintain strong ties with the family medicine community.11 At the Regional Department of Hospital Medicine at Fraser Health Authority in British Columbia where I practise, 95% of more than 300 individuals in the Department of Hospital Medicine have Certification in Family Medicine, and many of the Divisions of Family Practice in British Columbia are making efforts to strengthen their ties to hospitalists in their local communities. Results of the 2012 National Hospital Medicine Survey also showed that most respondents had more than 10 years of experience in clinical practice, with many having spent years practising community-based family medicine before making a career change to focus on hospitalist work. Undermining the quality of the work of hospitalists also brings into question the ability of the family medicine establishment to train qualified individuals to do the kind of inpatient care that hospitalists engage in.

Finally, using a study of residents and interns in the United States (with all the limitations that Dr Ladouceur himself outlines)1 and somehow tying that to hospitalists in Canada and concluding that their care might result in more harm for patients is a rather large leap that is reminiscent of the acrobatics observed in a Cirque du Soleil theatre! The suggestion that being a hospitalist is no different than being a medical trainee is insulting to the many thousands of experienced, highly skilled individuals who work under extremely stressful circumstances to look after an increasingly complex and multimorbid hospitalized patient population.

The nostalgia expressed by Dr Ladouceur and many others about family medicine’s past fails to recognize the reality that the era of comprehensive family medicine is long gone. Apart from a small number of family physicians who work in rural areas, most primary care doctors who practise in urban areas (where more than 80% of Canadians live) no longer practise comprehensive “cradle-to-grave” family practice. The traditional model of the general practitioner who knew a little about a lot of things and who provided a range of services worked well in the 19th and 20th centuries when medicine was simple and treatment options were limited—when the entire care team in a hospital comprised only a few nurses and physicians and there were no such things as computed tomography scanners or respiratory therapists (or any of the long list of health care professionals currently working in the acute care setting). The evidence for the demise of this model has been mounting over the past 20 years, with many studies conclusively demonstrating a progressive erosion in the scope of family physicians,12 considerable attitudinal changes among the new generation of family doctors about the role of hospital care in their careers,13 and changing perceptions of the importance of work-life balance and career expectations.14

At the same time, Canadian hospitalists have been filling the gaps in inpatient care that resulted from the voluntary mass migration of family doctors out of acute care settings, with better quality results5,6 and better or similar efficiency despite looking after a more complex patient population.15,16 Hospitalists are taking a leading role in teaching family medicine residents,17 as well as engaging in quality improvement activities on a mass scale.18 Moreover, their presence is associated with high satisfaction rates among the interprofessional care teams,19,20 as well as community-based family physicians.21

Across Canada, hospitalists have demonstrated that they are an essential component of a modern acute care institution and that they bring value both to patients and the broader health care system. Hospitalists are here to stay, and it is high time that their primary care colleagues acknowledge their enormous contribution to the medical landscape.

Footnotes

Competing interests

Dr Yousefi is a board member for the Canadian Society of Hospital Medicine and the CEO of Hospitalist Consulting Solutions. Opinions expressed in this letter are those of Dr Yousefi and do not represent the views of the Canadian Society of Hospital Medicine or Hospitalist Consulting Solutions.

. Does implementation of a hospitalist program in a Canadian community hospital improve measures of quality of care and utilization? An observational comparative analysis of hospitalists vs. traditional care providers. BMC Health Serv Res2013;13:204-11.

. Assessing the prevalence, penetration and performance of hospital physicians in Ontario. Implications for the quality and efficiency of inpatient care. Toronto, ON: University of Toronto; 2016. [dissertation].